Sarah Ferguson and P Diddy Alleged Secret 2004 Relationship Emerges
p diddy has been drawn into a fresh royal scandal after a report alleged Sarah Ferguson began a secret friends-with-benefits relationship with him in 2004. The claim adds another layer to the scrutiny around Ferguson, whose name has already been tied to Jeffrey Epstein in reporting about years of financial support and a wider circle of powerful associates.
Ghislaine Maxwell Party, 2002
The report says Ferguson and Sean Combs first met at a party hosted by Ghislaine Maxwell in New York in 2002, then moved into a secret relationship two years later. It also says the pair traveled together internationally and attended luxury events and hotels across Europe and Africa, suggesting the connection was not a brief encounter but a recurring arrangement that crossed borders and social circuits.
Emails, Titles, Royal Lodge
By 2025, the story was no longer confined to old social-calendar gossip. Emails allegedly surfaced showing Prince Andrew remained in contact with Jeffrey Epstein years after publicly saying he had cut ties with him, and by late 2025 he had reportedly been stripped of his royal titles. The same period brought another cost: Prince Andrew and Ferguson were forced to leave Royal Lodge, their longtime Windsor home.
A former assistant described life around Ferguson as “chaotic,” while staff members sometimes struggled to get reimbursed for expenses and used personal credit cards for purchases. A palace source said Ferguson “always gravitated to being with the bad boy,” a line that fits the report’s central allegation but also shows why these claims keep resurfacing alongside the Epstein story rather than fading into old tabloid history.
Combs in 2025
Sean Combs was convicted in 2025 on two counts related to transportation for prostitution and later sentenced to prison that same year. He also faced federal investigations, raids on multiple properties, and lawsuits, while several people accused him of sexual assault, abuse, coercion, trafficking-related conduct, and intimidation in civil complaints and public interviews. A former Bad Boy Records employee told The Daily Mail that Combs was fascinated with the British royal family and frequently spoke about Ferguson privately.
For readers, the practical takeaway is simple: this is not a new allegation about present-day conduct, but it is a report that ties Ferguson to a 2002-2004 relationship narrative now landing in the middle of two separate reputational collapses. The question that matters next is less about whether the old royal-social link existed and more about how much more of that private history will surface as the Epstein and Combs records keep expanding.